
Let’s cut the polite medical fluff and get to the truth:
Brain fog is real, it’s intrusive, and it can make you feel like you’re slowly losing your mind… even though you’re not. We not only deal with it within our illnesses but alot of us have Menopause or Perimenopause right along with these other intrusive issues
And the worst part?
Everything is affected.
Memory, focus, emotional regulation, sleep, language, motivation — pick a brain function, and menopause and Bipolar, ADHD, and Fibro toss a snow globe at it.

You’re not imagining this. And you’re definitely not “lazy” or “slacking” or “not trying hard enough.” What you’re feeling is neurological turbulence, courtesy of hormones that suddenly decided to jump ship without leaving a forwarding address.
Let’s break down what’s actually going on, in normal-human language.
🌡️ What Menopause Brain Fog Actually Is
Imagine your brain has a hype squad.
The leader of that hype squad? Estrogen.
Estrogen talks to your neurotransmitters — the little brain chemicals that run your mood, your focus, and your memory — and keeps them energized and coordinated.
Here are her three favorite teammates:
- Serotonin → mood, emotional stability
- Dopamine → motivation, attention, reward
- Acetylcholine → memory, learning, focus
When estrogen starts dropping during perimenopause and menopause?
The hype squad gets tired. The music cuts out. Everybody forgets the dance.
Suddenly the whole system is like:
“Wait… what were we doing? Why did we walk into the kitchen? Where are my keys? Why can’t I think of that one word? Why does everything feel… slow?”
It’s not subtle. It hits like a grocery cart to the ankles.
🧠 So What Does This Look Like in Real Life?
You may notice:

- Forgetting basic words you’ve used for 40 years
- Losing your train of thought mid-sentence
- Walking into a room and immediately forgetting why
- Misplacing everything — phone, keys, glasses, sanity
- Feeling mentally “slower” or foggier than usual
- Struggling to switch between tasks
- Needing instructions repeated
- Finding it harder to learn new things
- Getting overwhelmed faster than you used to
And then there’s the emotional layer:
You start wondering if you’re declining, losing your edge, or secretly broken.
(You’re not. You’re literally chemically glitching.)
😫 Why It Feels So Big and So Personal
Because menopause doesn’t just change estrogen — it changes sleep, stress hormones, and mood systems too.
Sleep becomes trash.
Night sweats and hot flashes interrupt the hours you do manage to get.
And sleep loss alone slows memory consolidation and attention — for anyone, not just hormonal women.
Add in drops in serotonin and dopamine, and suddenly:
- You can’t regulate stress as well
- Motivation takes a hit
- Focus becomes slippery
- Everything feels “harder” than it used to
So the fog isn’t coming from one place — it’s coming from everywhere at once.
That’s why it feels overwhelming. That’s why you feel unlike yourself.
That’s why it feels like your brain betrayed you.
🧬 The Science Behind It (In Actual Plain English)
Two big findings from research you can quote, cite, tattoo, whatever you need:
1. Menopause measurably affects memory and cognitive performance.

Large studies show that during the menopause transition, women experience real, trackable dips in memory, attention, and verbal fluency — especially when hormones fluctuate the most.
(SWAN Study – Greendale et al., 2010)
2. Estrogen plays a major role in protecting attention and memory systems.
Estrogen directly affects acetylcholine and dopamine — the same systems involved in memory, focus, and mental clarity.
When estrogen falls, those systems weaken, and cognitive symptoms follow.
(Sherwin, 2012)
This isn’t a personality flaw.
It’s biology.
❤️ You’re Not Failing — Your Brain Is Rewriting Its Operating System
Seriously — if your computer said “installing major update… do not shut down,” you’d expect things to be weird for a while.
That’s menopause.
Your brain is recalibrating.
Your hormones are rebalancing.
Your neurotransmitters are trying to remember their choreography.
You’re not broken.
You’re not incompetent.
You’re not “losing it.”

You’re adapting to a massive physiological shift that affects everyone going through it — but nobody talks about enough. Til next time gang, take care of yourselves, and each other.

Greendale GA, et al. The menopause transition and cognitive performance: the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN). Menopause. 2010;17(4):910–917.
Sherwin BB. Estrogen and cognitive functioning in women: lessons we have learned. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2012;37(8):1287–1295.



